News

For a Regional Solidarity Policy after 2020

(03 April 2018) - According to Marjorie Jouen, adviser at the Jacques Delors Institute and a friend of AEIDL, the time has probably come to agree on the four basic elements of the regional solidarity policy that the EU will require in the years after 2020.

The Commission recently presented a caricatural mapping of a possible reduction in its endowment.

With an equal budget (€370 billion), the policy would remain unchanged while by cutting the budget by 25% (€275 billion), only the least developed regions and “cohesion countries” (with a per capita GDP less than 90% of the EU-28 average) would receive funding. A budget cut by 33% (€245 billion) would mean that “cohesion countries” would be the only recipients.

Such a dramatization of the issue is both rather unrealistic, as it would be difficult to find a single Member State in favour of such sweeping cuts, and disturbing as it equates the regional policy to a financial window, a role it has never played.

According to Marjorie Jouen, the time has probably come to focus on what is important and to agree on the four basic elements of the regional solidarity policy that the EU will require in the years after 2020.